Driving with oven gloves

So motorists have been spotted driving with oven mittens in the triple-digit temperatures.

And some businesses have been covering their door handles with materials that alleviate the heat.

As well as burns, public health and emergency room personnel are prepared for extra cases of heat-related illnesses, including cramps, exhaustion and heat stroke.

Buckled roads

Motorways are buckling, with giant cracks forming across four lanes of Highway 50 near the Californian city of West Sacramento on Sunday.

The pavement has since been repaired and the road re-opened but the scorching heat is suspected to be behind the damage, according to ABC local affiliate KGO-TV.

Melting mail

Residents further south in Arizona are sharing on social media how the climbing temperatures are also impacting goods and other items, with incidents of candles melting in cars in Tucson and vinyl records sizzling in mailboxes in Phoenix.

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Closed zoos

Wildlife attractions like Reid Park Zoo in Tucson, Arizona, are closing early so staff can "focus on animal care", a zoo spokeswoman said.

And at Phoenix Zoo, shade structures, cooling slabs, pools and "bloodsicles" - the animal kingdom's version of a Popsicle - have been introduced, said communications director Linda Hardwick.

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Swimming scorpions

Desert-dweller scorpions are also attempting to avoid baking in the sun by quenching their thirsts in backyard swimming pools south of Phoenix.

"He had his tail up and was just swimming around," Jen Lawson, a mother-of-two, tells Maricopa-based CBS affiliate KPHO-TV of the second scorpion she has found in her pool.

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"Bark scorpions (unlike our other species) will drink freestanding water and could well be attracted to increased moisture levels around pools," University of Arizona entomologist Dr Dawn Gouge tells Eyes On Events News.

"During June we have extreme heat and no rain, even irrigation water dries up quickly so freestanding water is in short supply."

Quiet hiking trails

But some tourists are following the sun, making the trek to California's Death Valley for an opportunity to snap a photo of themselves and a temperature gauge reading 130 degrees.

Planes grounded

With the mercury reaching 119F (48C) in Phoenix, Arizona, on Tuesday, almost 50 flights to and from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport were cancelled because the weather was hotter than the operating temperatures of some of the smaller aircraft.

Free ice cream

And, of course, eggs cooking outside

"I have personally seen eggs cook on the sidewalk or cookies on a pan sitting on the dash of a car. Things like that," Jennifer Naples of Scottsdale, Arizona, tells Eyes On Events News. "This heat is unreal."